The Nuclear Regulatory Commission says radioactive water that spilled into the Mississippi River last year during the $85 million decommissioning of a former nuclear power plant in Wisconsin wasn't a public health risk.

Superior and Madison police plan to use smaller, armored emergency vehicles to replace mine-resistant vehicles on loan from the U.S. Department of Defense. Officials say they’re easier to maintain and more appropriate for law enforcement than military vehicles.

For many people unwanted weight is a lopsided battle they can’t win. Exercising may be difficult, if not impossible. And eating an addiction. For that reason, health advocates are urging insurers cover weight-loss surgery for public employees.

The state Department of Natural Resources announced last week that the Wisconsin's first elk hunt will take place this Fall near the Clam Lake area.. This comes 22 years after the reintroduction of elk to the state began. We talk to the DNR's ecologist to find out more about the...

Marquette’s highly competitive PA program attracted 1,400 applicants in the most recent selection process, only 55 were admitted. Now they're expanding. The private university is slated to break ground in April on an $18.5 million, 44,000 square-foot building that will open in 2019.

Twelve journalism students from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee traveled 17 hours by train to Washington and spent the weekend covering the March For Our Lives inspired by survivors of the February school shooting in Parkland, Florida.

Students from across the state are attempting to build off the momentum of the weekend demonstrations against gun violence by walking from Madison to Janesville, the hometown of U.S. House Speaker Paul Ryan.

Wisconsin's growing mosaic of struggles over voting rights grew even more complex in March 2018, when Milwaukee officials raised questions about a program that deactivated around 44,000 voter registrations in the city.